Communicating with Parents and Guardians about G Suite for Education

At Google, we believe it’s important for parents (which we’ll use in this article to include guardians) to understand how their children use Google services in the classroom. This article will help primary and secondary (K–12) schools that use G Suite for Education ensure that they can communicate effectively with parents and guardians about their students’ use of Google services with G Suite for Education accounts, and help obtain parents’ consent where appropriate.

Because school administrators can determine which services are available and the policies for each service, each school’s use of G Suite is different. We believe that schools are in the best position to tailor the information they share with parents based on their school’s actual use Google services. There’s no one-size-fits-all solution, but Google aims to give schools the information they need about our services and our privacy and security practices so they can keep parents well informed.

G Suite for Education schools can follow the steps below to help parents understand how the school uses Google services, what information Google gets when they use these services, and how Google uses that information.

1. Determine which Google services your school will use

G Suite for Education offers two categories of Google services: Core Services (like Gmail, Drive, Calendar, and Classroom) that are provided under your school’s G Suite for Education agreement, and Additional Services (like YouTube, Maps, and Blogger) that are designed for consumer users and can be used with G Suite for Education accounts if allowed for educational purposes by a school’s domain administrator. This article explains more about the differences between Core and Additional Services.

2. Get parent or guardian consent where appropriate

Schools may need or want to get a parent or guardian’s consent for the Google services they allow students to access. For schools in the United States, Google provides this template to help them do that, but it’s up to schools to determine how best to use it, to fill it with their own contact information and information about the services they enable, and to share it along with the resources for parents below.

Additional Services require consent for minor users: G Suite for Education requires in its agreement (section 2.5) that schools obtain parent or guardian consent for any Additional Services they allow students under the age of 18 to use.

Schools may opt to get consent for Core Services as well: As a best practice, school may also want to get parent or guardian consent for the Core Services they enable. Otherwise, a school would provide consent for Core Services on parents’ behalf by signing up for and using these G Suite for Education services.

Resources to share with parents and guardians

In addition to the template notice above, we recommend that schools share the resources listed below with parents and guardians as part of getting their consent:

Information about how Google’s products work to protect privacy is available in our Product Privacy Guide
and at privacy.google.com. Note that Google does not use any user personal information (or any information associated with an G Suite for Education Account) to target ads for G Suite for Education users in primary and secondary (K–12) schools, and any statements about ads on those pages are overridden by this restriction from our Privacy Notice.

Parents can visit myaccount.google.com while signed in to their child’s G Suite for Education account to view and manage the personal information and settings of the account.

Schools in different countries and communities have different regulations and approaches, and Google cannot advise you on compliance with the laws applicable to your school. You should obtain parental consent in a manner that complies with the laws of your jurisdiction.